Initial Intake:<br/><br/>Age: 29 <br/><br/>Gender: Female <br/><br/>Sexual Orientation: Heterosexual <br/><br/>Ethnicity: Caucasian <br/><br/>Relationship Status: Engaged <br/><br/>Counseling Setting: Agency - Telehealth <br/><br/>Type of Counseling: Individual <br/><br/>Presenting Problem: Anxiety <br/><br/>Diagnosis: Anxiety disorder, unspecified (F41.9), Reaction to severe stress, unspecified (F43.9) <br/><br/>Presenting Problem:<br/><br/>You are a new counseling intern in a community agency conducting virtual individual counseling sessions using Telemedicine technology. You were referred a 29-year-old female client by your agency’s Psychiatrist who felt she needed to return to weekly psychotherapy as she had previously been doing two years ago. During your initial assessment session, you learn she has three young children under age 8, lives with her fiancé who is the father of the two youngest children, and that due to medical reasons she is on disability through Medicaid and is unable to work. She tells you she has been depressed and contemplating suicide because she cannot find relief from her anxious thoughts. She wants to be a better mom to her children than her mother was to her and wants help overcoming grief and loss, traumatic memories, panic attacks and irritability.<br/><br/>Mental Status Exam:<br/><br/>Client presents as unkempt, hygiene unknown as it is unable to be assessed via telehealth. She is appropriately dressed. Motor movements are within normal limits. Her eye contact is intermittent as she appears to have difficulty focusing both eyes in the same direction (amblyopia or “lazy eye”). She is cooperative and engaged. She admits to having passive suicidal ideation when triggered with distressing emotions and has considered taking pills as a method that would be the most comfortable but declines having intent or plan to collect pills for this purpose. She states her anxiety increases when she takes her children to the grocery store and when she is around crowds, experiencing panic-like symptoms necessitating her to call a friend to calm her down. She reports experiencing flashbacks of sexual trauma and prefers to stay at home as often as possible. She is alert despite being distracted often by her children in the background and is oriented to person, place, time, and situation. She is fidgeting with her hands and speaking circumstantially, often changing topics and going on rants in different directions before returning to her main points. She reports low energy, sleeping too much and weight gain. She adds that she cries every night over losing her paternal grandfather over 10 years ago.<br/><br/>Family History:<br/><br/>Client has a strained relationship with her mother whom she reports is “always dating an alcoholic” and has been abusive to her growing up. She adds that her mother has “Bipolar depression and ADHD.” She complains often about both her mother and her fiance’s mother mistreating her, making her feel resentful and angry. Client has two sisters, one of which lives with her mother and is mentally challenged. Her other sister has little to no contact with her family. Her father, who has been divorced from her mother for over 20 years, was once accused of child sexual abuse which has alienated him from the rest of their family. The client is the only one who remains in contact with him. <br/><br/>What would be the most effective person-centered objective within the client's treatment plan goal of addressing trauma?
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AClient will learn new coping skills to help ameliorate anxious distress.
BClient will engage in narrative and exposure therapy interventions weekly for six months.
CClient will process her trauma by discussing and receiving feedback on thoughts, emotions, and behaviors on a weekly basis with therapist.
DClient will identify at least three triggers that cause stress reactions in her daily life and determine her connection to her root trauma through weekly discussion for six months.
✓ Correct answer: D. Client will identify at least three triggers that cause stress reactions in her daily life and determine her connection to her root trauma through weekly discussion for six months.Objectives must call the client to action while also being SMART (specific, measurable, achievable, realistic, timely).<br/><br/>Answer a) is not specific, measurable, or timely.<br/><br/>Answer b) is not person-centered; it is too direct in its interventions which might be challenging for a person with high anxiety who is processing her unresolved trauma while transitioning psychiatric medications.<br/><br/>The client has already accomplished answer d) by electing to re-engage in therapy when referred.
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